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Kara Gleason Program Director September 2006

Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History A Teaching American History Grant Provided by the U.S. Department of Education Award #: U215X060073. Kara Gleason Program Director September 2006. Agenda. Introductions & Overview Program Goals & Evaluation Evaluation Process, Sun Associates

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Kara Gleason Program Director September 2006

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  1. Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. HistoryA Teaching American History GrantProvided by the U.S. Department of EducationAward #: U215X060073 Kara Gleason Program Director September 2006

  2. Agenda • Introductions & Overview • Program Goals & Evaluation • Evaluation Process, Sun Associates • Outcome Objectives & Design • Year One Program Content & Workshops • Presenters: -FreshPond Education -Primary Source -University of Massachusetts Lowell, Graduate School of Education

  3. Encounters and Exchanges Human Bingo

  4. Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History • Three-year grant $998,084 • Four school districts • Danvers • Lowell • North Reading • Reading • For social studies teachers of grades 3 – 5 & 8 - 11

  5. Teaching American History Grant Program • Supports student achievement by improving teachers’ knowledge, understanding, and appreciation of American history • Based on the idea that students who know and appreciate American history will be well-prepared to understand and exercise their civic rights and responsibilities

  6. Program Goals • Improve the content knowledge of teachers in American history • Strengthen American history programs in all four districts • Meet the Historical Thinking Benchmarks • Develop accessible curricula for students • Create highly qualified master teachers

  7. Evaluation Questions • To what extent has the project improved teachers’ knowledge and practice of traditional American history? • To what extent has the project been successful in developing new leadership and training structures to strengthen the capacity of participating districts to teach American history?

  8. External Evaluation • Sun Associates • Evaluation, Professional Development, Planning • Program Evaluators • Five other Teaching American History projects in MA • District Projects • State Projects • National/Regional Projects • Curriculum Focus • zwarren@sun-associates.com • jclark@sun-associates.com • jsun@sun-associates.com

  9. Evaluation Process Steps • Organizing an evaluation committee and convening a meeting (10/17/06) • Developing benchmarked indicators for project performance • Based on evaluation questions • Holistic • Multi-level • Forms the basis for data collection

  10. Collect data • Formative reporting to the project • Annual review of the assembled evaluation data against the benchmarked rubrics • This generates annual findings and recommendations • Basis for the required annual report

  11. Outcome Objectives • At least 70 teachers of U.S. history each year will have a deepened understanding of the topics they teach • Teachers will understand the continuing significance of our founding documents “I am not a teacher but an awakener.” - Robert Frost

  12. Outcome Objectives • Teachers will be prepared to teach American History as a stand-alone history course • Unit-specific lesson plans and curriculum materials will be available to use in classrooms • Student interest and content knowledge will deepen • Professional relationships among colleagues will be developed, teacher leadership opportunities will be presented, & professional pride will increase

  13. Danvers Public Schools Laura Schall-Leckrone, Director of Humanities North Reading Public Schools Pamela Beaudoin, Curriculum & Technology Director Reading Public Schools John Doherty, Assistant Superintendent Lowell Public Schools Joyce Tapper-Benham, Professional Development Coordinator Pamela Buchek, Reading/ELA Coordinator Staff - District Liaisons

  14. Danvers Margaret Maher David Buckhoff North Reading Kathryn Jones Jason MacIntosh Reading Helen Sellers Mary Anne Cuscuna Thomas Darrin Staff - Teacher Liaisons • Integrate the project with the needs and broader professional development agenda for each district • Help recruit teachers for the program activities • Maintain timely communication with districts and program participants

  15. Kara Gleason Program Director Patricia L. Fontaine Assistant Professor, University of Massachusetts Lowell Graduate School of Education Julia de la Torre Program Director, Primary Source Sharon Burke Library Media Specialist, Reading Memorial High School Jeff Sun, Zora Warren, & Jeanne Clark Program Evaluators, Sun Associates All teacher & district liaisons Advisory Committee

  16. Program Content – Year One Year One (2006-2007) Theme: • Exploring Conflict and Consensus Among Peoples from the American Colonies to the New Republic • 17th and 18th centuries

  17. Select Content Subtopics – Year One • Colonial America • The French and Indian War • Native Cultures • Spanish, French and Dutch America • Roles of Blacks in the Colonies • Political Thought of the Revolution • Founding Documents • The U.S. Constitution Summer Institute - Field Study at Plimoth Plantation

  18. Program Content – Year Two Year Two (2007-2008) Theme: • U.S. Expansion and Connections to the World in Antebellum America • 19th Century Sketchbook (detail), ca. 1812, William Farrington. Painted aboard HMS Clio.

  19. Select Content Subtopics – Year Two • Religion and Reform • Foreign Perspectives on the U.S. • The Barbary Wars, War of 1812, the Monroe Doctrine • Mexican American War • The Old West • Connecting to the World through Trade and Industry • The International Women’s Movement • Slavery and Abolitionism Summer Institute Field Trip – Peabody Essex Museum

  20. Program Content – Year Three Year Three (2008-2009) Themes: • The Cold War and Post-Cold War: The U.S. on the World Stage • U.S. Immigration, Migration, and Race Relations

  21. Select Content Subtopics – Year Three • Immigration, Emigration and American Identity • Migrant Labor • Native American Migrations • Race Relations • Domestic Culture of the Early Cold War • Vietnam and its Legacies • The Cold War as a Global Conflict

  22. Year One Calendar & Workshops • Described in the Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History booklet • More detailed calendar included in your folder • Substitute coverage is provided for events held during the school day • Book discussion groups are held after school • Primary Source Summer Institute takes place from July 23 – 27, 2007

  23. Levels of Participation Full-time Participant (Honorarium of $750) Choose a minimum of three from A - E: A. Book Discussion Group B. Primary Source Summer Institute C. Big6 “Train the Trainers” Workshops D. Technology in the American History Classroom (2-day workshop) E. Capturing History (2-day workshop) Must choose at least one, may do both

  24. Levels of Participation • Part-time Participant (Honorarium of $375) Choose a minimum of two from A - E: A. Book Discussion Group B. Primary Source Summer Institute C. Big6 “Train the Trainers” Workshops D. Technology in the American History Classroom (2-day workshop) E. Capturing History (2-day workshop) Must choose at least one, may do both

  25. Big6 Research Model • September 27, 2006 & April 25, 2007 • “Train the Trainer” workshops on the Big 6 information literacy model • Trainers will work with another teacher & students using the Big6

  26. Mini-Sabbaticals • Grants for up to $500 to four teachers in grades 3 -5 and 8 – 11 • Teachers will develop products such as papers, exhibits, oral presentations or audio-visual presentations for their American history classroom • Grant pays for substitute coverage, an historian, conference fees and materials

  27. Annual Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History Conference • April 3, 2006 • Focus is on the theme for the year • Leading historians will present on their areas of expertise • Lead teachers will present lesson plan & classroom ideas based on the historians’ content

  28. Book Discussion Groups • Twenty teachers from each district • Meet for seven 2-hour book discussion study groups • Books include nonfiction, historical fiction, and biography • Participants will develop a related work product • Led by Dean Bergeron & Patricia L. Fontaine, from the University of Massachusetts Lowell

  29. FreshPond Education • Technology in the American History Classroom • Two-day workshop • January 30, 2007 & February 15, 2007

  30. Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History Website • Available at http://gse.uml.edu/rtah/ • Vital source of information about the grant • Will include teacher-developed work products & a digital photo library

  31. University of Massachusetts Lowell Graduate School of Education • Capturing History • Two-day workshop by John Wren, UMass Lowell Graduate School of Education Technology Consultant • April 12, 2007 & May 10, 2007

  32. University of Massachusetts Lowell Graduate School of Education • Program Partner • Patricia L. Fontaine, Assistant Professor - Advisory role - Facilitator for a book group designed for 3rd grade teachers from Lowell

  33. Upcoming • Distribute booklet to teachers of grades 3 – 5 & 8 – 11 • Talk about the program; get teachers excited about history • Encourage participants to invite district liaisons, Sun Associates, & the project director into their classrooms • Once onboard teachers will be contacted regarding the logistics of the workshops

  34. The End

  35. Book Titles – Lowell 3rd Grade Teachers • Ray Raphael, Founding Myths: Stories that Hide Our Patriotic Past. • Joseph Ellis, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation. Group, reprint 2002. • David Hackett Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride. • Two other historical fiction titles to be chosen by the participants

  36. Year One – Book Titles • Ray Raphael, Founding Myths: Stories that Hide Our Patriotic Past • John Demos, The Unredeemed Captive: A Family Story from Early America • Benjamin Franklin, The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin • Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, Letters from an American Farmer and Sketches of Eighteenth Century America • David McCullough, 1776

  37. Curriculum Development • Content integrated with: • A focus on historical thinking • Historical research skills • Information management skills

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